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EU Power

Renewable Energy Production Beat Fossil Fuels in Europe (theverge.com) 146

Renewable energy became the biggest source of electricity in the European Union in 2020, beating fossil fuels for the first time. Germany and Spain also hit that milestone individually last year -- so did the UK, which officially left the EU in January 2020. From a report: Renewables powered 38 percent of electricity in the EU last year, according to a report released today by energy think tanks Ember and Agora Energiewende. That gives renewable energy a narrow lead over fossil fuel-fired generation, which accounted for 37 percent of Europe's electricity. The remaining quarter comes from nuclear energy.

The rise of renewables is good news for the health of the planet. Still, renewable energy will need to grow at an even faster rate to stave off a future with more climate change-induced disasters. "Renewables overtaking fossils is an important milestone in Europe's clean energy transition. However, let's not be complacent," Patrick Graichen, director of Agora Energiewende, said in a statement. "Post-pandemic recovery [programs] need to go hand-in-hand with accelerated climate action."

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Renewable Energy Production Beat Fossil Fuels in Europe

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  • by dmay34 ( 6770232 ) on Monday January 25, 2021 @05:44PM (#60990934)

    Huh. Turns out the fossil fuel guys were liars the whole time. Who would'a thunk. Remember when they said that you can't run an economy on renewables? That was a lie the whole time. Turns out you can, just fine.

    • How are they liars when most the energy comes from fossil fuel? It's 80% fossil if more than electricity is considered. Sure, someday, but that day is not today nor 10 years from now.

    • There is a big difference. Particularly with the French nuclear program. It is the latter that is important, not the former.

      • FTA: Renewables powered 38 percent of electricity in the EU last year[...] That gives renewable energy a narrow lead over fossil fuel-fired generation, which accounted for 37 percent of Europe's electricity. The remaining quarter comes from nuclear energy.

        Another excuse down the drain...

    • by MrData ( 130916 )
      And it has been steadily increasing : https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/... [europa.eu]
    • How can any one give such à purile comment à +5 informative !!

      * Renewables aren't always available
      * So you need a backup source of energy to replace the renewables when they aren't being produced
      * That could be a stored energy source for periods when excess renewable energy is produced, but there is nowhere near enough of that to help
      * So any power grid with significant renewable energy use, needs thermal power plants that are idle when the renewables are produced but can take up the load otherwis

    • I must have missed it, what major economy is running continuously on 100% renewable energy?
  • Canada is already powered by more than 67% renewable energy, granted they have a huge land mass with lots of Hydro...
    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      Canada has slightly fewer people than the state of California (38 million Canadians versus nearly 40 million Californians), and 20x the land mass (10 million sq KM vs half-million sq KM in California).

    • The renewable is 'hydro electric', you know, dams. One of the largest is Baie James in Quebec the construction of which made Quebec a real player in the hydro market.

      Question: how much woodland has to be flooded to make a Baie James?
      Answer: 11,500 square kilometers. But it's okay no humans were displaced except some First Nations people. Mostly it was just trees and animals.

      Renewables? Always ask what is not being mentioned in the cost.

  • Surely we in the UK left the EU in January 2021....

  • Good job Europe! (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    You're really kicking ass with this renewable energy, while importing the BULK of your energy from Russia. But who cares about that pesky fact. And great job on increasing your emissions after joining the Virtue Signaling Accord.
  • it's good news if you breath air. Smog is nasty stuff and has tons of short & long term health effects. Us nerds, riddled with Asthma as we tend to be, can attest first hand to that.
    • Yeah, moving away from coal is good no matter why you do it.

      • Yeah, moving away from coal is good no matter why you do it.

        Depends on your perspective. In a rich and advanced country you can move from coal to nuclear or solar or wind or whatever and pay a little premium for the peace of mind that you are Captain Planet, saving all of humanity.
        But for the majority of humans who don't live in those countries, and the millions and millions who have no electricity, and rely on burning twigs and animal poo for survival, and whose only hope of stepping out of hunger and poverty is the newly available cheap coal based energy, taking

        • by shilly ( 142940 )

          It's not like the only two choices are dung and coal, though, is it? Plenty of renewables projects in developing world economies. No reason why they can't choose to skip outdated tech the same way they have for mobile vs fixed line.

          • It's not like the only two choices are dung and coal, though, is it? .

            Let's see, a solar array, an inverter, fusebox, cabling and sockets, an electric oven, whats that about $5000? Compared to a piece of coal at a few cents? For the millions in poverty earning a $1 day who live in box made of scrap?

            No reason why they can't choose to skip outdated tech the same way they have for mobile vs fixed line.

            You're still living in the land of the rich. 3 billion people don't have a phone, a mobile tower doesn't help them in any way.

        • and those poor countries are being slowly converting to offgrid solar with batteries in their homes especially in Africa.
    • When young I lived a few miles outside of downtown LA. I remember weeks or longer in the summer where my eyes were burning and had a bit of a problem breathing. I too now have asthma.

      Then the damned progressives passed anti-smog laws and cleared up over 90% of the problems. I'm no longer free to breathe smog any more. It's enough to make me cry, but now it's much harder.

      • by cas2000 ( 148703 )

        Only 90%? That's less than 100% so it wasn't worth doing at all!

        Even 100% is for losers. Ask any coach or motivational speaker, 110% is the absolute minimum required.

        • Only 90%? That's less than 100% so it wasn't worth doing at all!

          Even 100% is for losers. Ask any coach or motivational speaker, 110% is the absolute minimum required.

          My guru tells me that I only need to do 1% better than the next guy to win, so I always aim for 111%. You 110% guys are losers!

  • Different European countries produce different fractions of electricity from renewable sources. Denmark with wind turbines produced about 50% from wind in early 2020, now probably somewhat more. The Netherlands produces about 16% of its electricity from wind and around 2% from solar. Norway produces 99% of its electricity from hydroelectric plants. Of course, Norway has only about 1% of Europe's population. I seem to remember that during the last summer, Germany, not a sunny country by any means, produced s
    • Norway is not in the European Union, so almost certainly not part of these stats (but I haven't rtfa obviously)
    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      I seem to remember that during the last summer, Germany, not a sunny country by any means, produced so much solar sourced electricity, they were giving it away. Not sure what happened when the sun went down.

      You are talking about brief moments when Germany spontaneously generated more electricity then it needed at that particular moment. Germany always has, and always will, for the for seeable future, rely on non-solar electricity generation.

    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      For example:

      2014 - https://hardware.slashdot.org/... [slashdot.org]

      2012 - https://hardware.slashdot.org/... [slashdot.org]

    • Germany hit 50% renewables in 2020, and it is not just because of the coronavirus epidemic, because in 2019 renewables were responsible for 46% of the electrical power generation.

  • Should read: "Renewable Electricity Production Beat Fossil Fuels in the European Union"

    1. Energy encompasses more than electricity. The majority of the EU's transport is still running on fossil fuels.
    2. There's more to Europe than the EU.

    • by dryeo ( 100693 )

      I believe most of the railroad network is electrified and used quite a bit.

    • by fgouget ( 925644 )

      2. There's more to Europe than the EU.

      That depends [wikipedia.org].

      Europe is a continent [...] Europe may also refer to:

      • Continental Europe, the mainland of Europe excluding the islands surrounding it
      • European Union, a European political supranational entity
  • The switch to "renewable" fuels in Europe has not been as ecologically sound as one would think. For instance, because wood is classified as renewable, it's okay to clear-cut Estonian forests and burn them for fuel [theguardian.com]. Never mind that CO2 is only sequestered if it stays in the biomass and is not burned...

    • Estonian forests have been cut for many years, even before switching to renewables has been planned. I remember Estonia in the early 1990s. Visited the country a decade later and was shocked by the tree loss.

    • yes, but there are some ecological groups trying to get that redefined in law to take it off the clean energy list
  • by valinor89 ( 1564455 ) on Tuesday January 26, 2021 @06:36AM (#60992528)

    Having renewable energy is all well and good, but this winter in Spain we are having record high prices for electricity. Turns out when the weather is bad wind turbines and solar panels don't produce energy, and hydropower is severelly affected as well.

  • Renewable energy takes too much land, labor, and materials to ever replace fossil fuels. The rate at which we are building renewable energy energy production is not keeping up with growth in demand. Reductions in CO2 emissions is only from natural gas replacing coal. We won't get to zero CO2 emissions without nuclear power. All we are doing now is delaying tactics until people get comfortable with the idea of more nuclear fission power. Once the realization sets in that we can only maintain our standar

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